Multi-mode handheld wireless device

ABSTRACT

Various embodiments of the invention relate to a multi-function handheld user device that may have multiple selectable modes of operation. Various mechanisms may be provided for switching between modes. Within each mode, context awareness and situational awareness may be used to obtain additional information or perform additional functions not directly requested by the user.

CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS

This application is a divisional of U.S. application Ser. No. 13/376,618 filed Dec. 7, 2011, which is a national stage application of international application PCT/US2009/069927 filed Dec. 31, 2009, which in turn is derived from U.S. provisional patent application Ser. No. 61/187,520, filed Jun. 16, 2009, and claims priority to those filing dates for all applicable subject matter.

BACKGROUND

As the wireless industry grows, different types of handheld devices, with different capabilities, are used for different purposes. Cell phones allow verbal communication and texting, personal data assistants allow the user to organize his/her schedule and access email, music players provide for portable music enjoyment, netbook computers enable full internet access, etc. Although some consolidation has occurred, the typical user must still carry around multiple devices to satisfy his/her needs. Further, none of these devices is context aware—that is, the device cannot adapt to the user's environment because the device is not aware of that environment. In addition, a user may wish to use the same device in different areas of his/her life (i.e., work, personal, family, travel, etc.), with different requirements in each for things such as security levels, available functionality, contact information, etc. Again, current devices cannot satisfy this demand because they cannot distinguish between the different areas of the user's life.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

Some embodiments of the invention may be understood by referring to the following description and accompanying drawings that are used to illustrate embodiments of the invention. In the drawings:

FIG. 1 shows a multi-function handheld user device, according to an embodiment of the invention.

FIGS. 2A-2D show how the different modes may have access to different data, functionality, and features, according to various embodiments of the invention.

FIG. 3 shows a flow diagram of a method of converting button presses into various operations, according to an embodiment of the device.

FIG. 4 shows a flow diagram of a method of inputting data for multiple modes of operation, according to an embodiment of the invention.

FIG. 5 shows a flow diagram of a method of transferring data between modes, according to an embodiment of the invention.

FIG. 6 shows a flow diagram of a method of using both Context Awareness and Situational Awareness to trigger an action, according to an embodiment of the invention.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION

In the following description, numerous specific details are set forth. However, it is understood that embodiments of the invention may be practiced without these specific details. In other instances, well-known circuits, structures and techniques have not been shown in detail in order not to obscure an understanding of this description.

References to “one embodiment”, “an embodiment”, “example embodiment”, “various embodiments”, etc., indicate that the embodiment(s) of the invention so described may include particular features, structures, or characteristics, but not every embodiment necessarily includes the particular features, structures, or characteristics. Further, some embodiments may have some, all, or none of the features described for other embodiments.

In the following description and claims, the terms “coupled” and “connected,” along with their derivatives, may be used. It should be understood that these terms are not intended as synonyms for each other. Rather, in particular embodiments, “connected” is used to indicate that two or more elements are in direct physical or electrical contact with each other. “Coupled” is used to indicate that two or more elements co-operate or interact with each other, but they may or may not be in direct physical or electrical contact.

As used in the claims, unless otherwise specified the use of the ordinal adjectives “first”, “second”, “third”, etc., to describe a common element, merely indicate that different instances of like elements are being referred to, and are not intended to imply that the elements so described must be in a given sequence, either temporally, spatially, in ranking, or in any other manner.

Various embodiments of the invention may be implemented in one or any combination of hardware, firmware, and software. The invention may also be implemented as instructions contained in or on a computer-readable medium, which may be read and executed by one or more processors to enable performance of the operations described herein. A computer-readable medium may include any mechanism for storing information in a form readable by one or more computers. For example, a computer-readable medium may include a tangible storage medium, such as but not limited to read only memory (ROM); random access memory (RAM); magnetic disk storage media; optical storage media; a flash memory device, etc.

Many people engage in a variety of activities that tend to form into natural clusters. For example, a professional's life may be clustered around work, family, and personal activities. A teenager's life may be clustered around school, family, and friends. A retiree's life may be clustered around finance, family, and health. Each cluster of activities may have its own rules, behaviors, constraints, and priorities that are somewhat different than in the other clusters. People who use a single device in all areas of their life typically discover that the different areas of their life intrude into each other, with consequences that have the potential to be socially embarrassing and even legally damaging. As technology becomes an increasingly important tool in keeping up with our daily activities, it becomes increasing desirable that this tool adapt itself to these different areas of a person's life, so as to avoid or at least reduce these consequences.

For example, a device may operate in a different ‘mode’ for each such area of a person's life. While a device may accommodate any feasible number of such modes, coinciding with an equal number of areas of the user's life, too few modes may provide insufficient flexibility, and too many modes may be too much for the average person to keep up with. Three modes is used here as an example of an optimal number of modes for many people, but the inventive concepts may be applied to two, four, or more modes without departing from the basic principles described.

To illustrate these clusters of activities, take a look at the three possible areas of a professional's life: work, family, and personal. The work mode encompasses time at the office or other places of work, and may revolve around business email and phone calls, documents, expense reports, meetings, business contacts, etc. Some of these activities may involve sensitive business information and therefore require a level of security that isn't needed in the other areas. The family mode may pertain to a spouse, children, other relatives, neighbors, and the children's teachers. It may involve emails and phone calls related to these people, and to school meetings, vacation schedules, social networking sites, home maintenance, and related financial obligations. The personal mode may pertain to individual interests such as hobbies and entertainment, and may be clustered around circles of friends based on common interest profiles.

In each of these areas of life, people have different desires and needs and face different constraints. For example, people at work demand a different level of technical support than people at home, and the rules of good behavior constraining people at work are significantly more restrictive than those constraining their play activities. The consequences of error also differ; for example it might be critical to apply filters preventing the inadvertent use of certain expressions at school or work, but less critical when interacting with friends. In a similar manner, the style of communicating in business may need to be more formal than when communicating with friends. Similarly, it may be important not to inadvertently send a family email to a business contact, or send a confidential business email to a relative. By separating the operation of the device into distinct modes, these types of problems can be automatically prevented.

The use of separate modes corresponding to separate areas of the user's life may allow the device to better interpret (and provide recommendations for) the user's actions, It may also permit the device to apply different rules regarding access, authentication, and content standards in each mode. Financial data may be kept separate between the modes.

The operations of the device may be different depending on which mode it is in. This difference may be implemented by accessing different databases, by running different applications, and by applying different constraints to its operations. In various embodiments of the invention, the user may be able to select which mode the handheld device is to operate in (and therefore which area of his/her life it is directed to), and the device will apply the appropriate restrictions and access the appropriate databases and applications for that area. This characteristic is referred to herein as “context awareness”. Context awareness may begin by noting which of the three modes the device is operating in, but may be expanded to include other internal operational indicators as well.

The handheld device may also automatically adjust its operation based on the environment that it senses. For example, the device might automatically trigger the work mode by sensing the wireless router used at work, by inferring the user is at work from the time of day and day of the week, by determining its location through a GPS sensor, or through other techniques of location awareness. Of course, these modes could also be manually overridden by the user as appropriate. In a similar manner, the device may stay in the same mode, but perform differently based on sensing its environment. For example, if it senses it is moving at typical automobile speeds, it may provide traffic information, weather information, data on nearby restaurants, etc. This characteristic of changing its operation based on sensing the surrounding environment is referred to herein as “situational awareness”. Context awareness and situational awareness may both be used by the device to alter its operation, either separately or in cooperation with each other.

Various embodiments of the invention relate to a multi-function handheld user device that may have multiple selectable modes of operation for different areas of the user's life, each mode with its own database, applications, preferences, operational restrictions, and access limitations. Various mechanisms may be provided for switching between modes.

FIG. 1 shows a multi-function handheld user device, according to an embodiment of the invention. The illustrated device 110 is shown with various components, such as a touchscreen (a touch-sensitive display screen) 120 and buttons A, B, and C. Another input/output function 130 is also shown which, depending on the embodiments, may provide various types of functionality, such as but not limited to: 1) another button, 2) a camera lens, 3) a microphone, 4) etc. Other buttons, sensors, output devices, etc. may also be included but are not shown to avoid excessive clutter in the drawing.

The illustrated buttons are called ‘hard’ buttons because they are physical buttons, located in specific areas. But in some embodiments, ‘soft’ buttons may be used, each consisting of an image on the touch-sensitive display screen. The soft button may be activated by touching the image. In some situations, these soft buttons may also be used for mode selection. Their graphic image and their position on the screen, as well as whether they even show up on the screen, may be programmably variable. Various soft buttons may have the same or different functionality as hard buttons.

Although the illustrated device 110 is depicted as having a particular shape, proportion, and appearance, with buttons located in particular locations, this is for example only and the embodiments of the invention may not be limited to this particular physical configuration. For example, in some embodiments the buttons may have different sizes and/or different shapes than shown, be located elsewhere on the same side or on different sides of the device, etc. They may also come in different colors. In some embodiments the overall shape of the device 110 may be different than shown.

Device 110 may also include functionality for wireless communication, for various visual, audio, and physical inputs, and for various visual, audio, and physical outputs. In some embodiments, the device may use this functionality in different ways depending on which mode it is in, and/or depending on which situation and context it senses.

Multimode Operation

The various modes may be created in the same device through various techniques that provide sufficient isolation and restricted access to keep the modes operationally separate. As previously mentioned, the device may operate somewhat differently depending on which mode it is operating in.

FIGS. 2A-2D show how the different modes may have access to different data, functionality, and features, according to various embodiments of the invention. The three modes are labeled as Work, Family, and Personal, but these are just an example. Any other labels could be used, and the usage of the different modes may be different than that described. However, the basic concept should be evident from these examples.

For example, FIG. 2A shows an approach that implements each mode as a separate virtual machine. In this technique, multiple virtual machines may operate in isolation within a single physical machine. Each virtual machine, implemented in software, does not know of the existence of any other virtual machine in this device and therefore does not knowingly share any resources (e.g., data, software, hardware, etc.) with another machine. If the different virtual machines must communicate with each other, they do so through virtual interfaces, much as separate physical machines would communicate through a network connection, except that the interfaces may be tied to each other through software within device 110 rather than through external physical connections. Whether the different virtual machines actually share portions of memory or other resources may be irrelevant, since they have no capacity to know of this sharing.

FIGS. 2B-2D show various approaches in which the necessary information and data is separated in different ways with or without the use of virtual machines. In some embodiments, each block shown in FIGS. 2B-2D may be assumed to be a separately defined portion of memory, (physical and/or virtual memory) that is dedicated to that mode of operation, but other embodiments may use other techniques to separate these entities. In some embodiments, a distinction is made between operational memory (e.g., RAM memory in which the applications are executed) and storage memory (e.g., flash memory in which the applications and data are stored for future access), and each type of memory may be treated separately for each type of content. Within this document, ‘access limitations’ refers to limitations on which data, application programs, devices, addresses, etc., may be accessed while in a particular mode. ‘Operational restrictions’ refers to restrictions on what operations a device may perform while in a particular mode. Obviously there are some instances in which a particular resource may fall into either category, (for example, if a spreadsheet function cannot be performed in a particular mode, it might be because the device cannot access the spreadsheet application, or it might be because the device can access the spreadsheet application but is not allowed to enter data into it). This possible overlap does not detract from either definition, it merely recognizes that some things may fall into either category depending on how they are implemented.

In FIG. 2B, each mode may be assumed to operate using a different database, and run different sets of applications. Each mode may also have its own operational restrictions, its own list of contacts, its own access limitations, its own list of user preferences, and its own set of other things not listed here. In the configuration shown in FIG. 2B, it is implied that each database is separate from the other two databases, even though they may contain duplicate copies of some of the same data. Likewise, it is implied that each mode has is own copy of the applications software, even though the same application might be used in multiple modes. The other items listed for each mode are likewise shown as being separate and isolated from similar items in the other modes. This may be implemented, for example, by dedicating a portion of memory to each mode, and having all the relevant data, applications software, limitations, restrictions, etc., for each mode contained only in the memory dedicated to that mode. While this approach maintains strict separation, it may make inefficient use of the available operational and storage memory. Although this approach may encompass the virtual machine approach of FIG. 2A, it may also be implemented without the use of virtual machines.

FIG. 2C shows another approach, in which all data is kept in a common set of databases, but each mode's access limitations restrict which databases, or portions of a database, the device may access while in that mode. There may therefore be no need to keep separate copies of data that is common to multiple modes. Similarly, a single copy of every application may be maintained in storage memory, but each application may only be accessible to a particular mode if that mode's access limitations permit it. This approach may be extended to external access as well (e.g., contact information for a person or a website may be kept in a single place, but the ability to contact that person or website may be limited by each mode's access limitations). Conversely, it may be preferable to maintain separate copies of some things within each mode, such as user preferences or some operational restrictions (e.g., permissible language in an email). Any of the listed items of FIG. 2C may either be maintained separately for each mode, or maintained in a common pool available to whichever modes are authorized to access it, depending on which approach is deemed preferable in a given embodiment.

FIG. 2D shows an approach with a fourth mode (labeled as a shared mode) that provides overall control for the other three modes. In this approach the fourth mode, which may not be visible to the user, maintains control over the data, applications, limitations, etc, for each of the other modes. User preferences and/or operational restrictions for the first three modes may be maintained by each of those modes (as shown), or may also be under control of the fourth mode. In some embodiments the fourth mode also controls the transfer of data between the other modes. While the modes of FIGS. 2A-2C may each maintain a list of some of the limitations and restrictions they operate under, the fourth mode may keep such lists for the other modes, may handle requests for those resources from the other modes, and may grant or reject such requests. The fourth mode may also change the flags, indicators, lists, etc. as necessary to modify which modes have access to which resources. This approach may simplify the maintenance of what each mode can do, by keeping all that information in one place.

Regardless of which approach is used, the pointers, indexes, and other functional indicators that define access limitations and operational restrictions for each mode may be stored in a secure and compartmentalized manner, so that they can be accessed and/or changed only from the appropriate mode. This information may be stored at the operating system level, or in some embodiments in hardware (e.g., a SIM card or an embedded flash memory). As long as a single user is controlling all modes, and keeping the operations of each mode separate according to that user's wishes, normal security protections may not be necessary to keep the access privileges of one mode from intruding into another mode in an illicit manner. However, if multiple users have access to the device, security protections may be implemented as needed (e.g., entry into the Work mode may be restricted with a password or other security feature).

Mode Selection

Returning to FIG. 1, buttons A, B and C may be used to select the different modes the device will operate in. For example, if the user decides to assign these modes to his Work, Family, and Personal life, he might assign button A to select Work mode, button B to select Family mode, and button C to select Personal mode. Pressing a particular button may then cause the assigned mode to become active. In some embodiments, text on the display under each button may indicate which mode is assigned to that button, and thereby allow each user to customize those labels.

Not only may these buttons be used to simply select a mode, but various button-pressing conventions may allow the user to expand the functionality of these buttons to indicate where within a given mode the operations will begin, and in some cases whether a multi-mode operation will be enabled. This expanded functionality may be based on such things as the duration of the press, the number of times a button is pressed, the number of buttons pressed simultaneously, the sequence of pressing buttons, etc. For example, the following conventions might be used:

1) If the device is already in an operating state, a single press of a single button may switch the device to the mode assigned to that button. This function may be implemented through either hard or soft buttons.

2) If the device is in a sleep state, a short press of a single hard button may awake the device in the corresponding mode at the most recently visited location within the menu structure.

3) If the device is in a sleep state, a long press of a single hard button may awake the device at the home page of the corresponding mode.

4) From either an operating or sleep state, a rapid double press of the same button may place the device in a split screen view within the corresponding mode.

5) From either an operating or sleep state, concurrently pressing two of the hard buttons may place the device in a dual mode, in which the user may interact with both modes from the same screen.

6) A short press followed by a long press of the same button may call up a more complex set of soft buttons for that mode, allowing the user more choices than are feasible with only three hard buttons.

These are only a few of the possible button pressing conventions that may be used to select a mode, a starting location within that mode, and in some instances multi-mode operation. Other conventions may also be used.

FIG. 3 shows a flow diagram of a method of converting button presses into various operations, according to an embodiment of the device. The method of flow diagram 300 is general purpose in nature, describing only how the button presses are used to determine what action to take. The specific action that results from particular button inputs can vary widely depending on the specific design constraints built into the device. In some embodiments these design constraints are hard-wired into the device. In some embodiments these constraints may be programmable. In some embodiments these constraints may be changed by the user. In various embodiments, the button press conventions may be based on one or more of the following:

a) which button is pressed,

b) whether multiple buttons are pressed at the same time,

c) whether it is a single press or a sequence of multiple presses, and

d) the duration of each press.

The process may begin at 310 when the device detects that a button has been pressed, and which button was pressed is detected at 320. These operations may also detect if more than one button is pressed simultaneously. In some embodiments, the duration of the press (i.e., how long the button is pressed) is determined at 330. In particular, a long or short press may be distinguished, with a long press exceeding a predetermined length of time before the button is released, and a short press not exceeding that predetermined length of time. In some embodiments this button-press information may be recorded using instructions performed by a microprocessor, but in other embodiments a state machine or other hardware design may maintain the information until the button pressing sequence is over.

After the button is released, a timer may be started to see if another button is to be pressed as a part of this sequence. If another button is pressed before the timer expires at 340, the operations of 310-320-330 may be repeated, and this information retained along with the information from the previous button press. If the time expires, it may be assumed that the button-press operation has been completed, and the device may then determine which action is to be taken as a result. In some embodiments, the device may refer to a table that converts button-press operations into related actions, as described at 350. Other embodiments may use other techniques. Once the indicated operation has been determined, that operation may be performed by the device at 360. Such operations may include, but are not limited to: a) going to the top-level starting point of the indicated mode, b) going to a point of the indicated mode that the device was at when that mode was last exited, c) going into a dual-mode operation, d) going into a low-power operation to reduce battery consumption, e) etc.

Cross-Mode Communications

In most cases, a separation of the available data, contacts, security, etc. between the different modes is highly desirable, even if some of the content of those things is duplicated between modes. But in some instances, it may be desirable to enter the same data, limitations, restrictions, etc. into more than one mode at the same time, or to move such information from one mode to another. In one type of operation, the user may make simultaneous entries into the two modes. In another type of operation, the user may transfer information between the two modes using a drag-and-drop or cut-and-paste operation.

Permission checks may be used to prohibit certain flows of information. For example, the user may be allowed to cut-and-paste information from Work mode to Personal mode, but not from Personal mode to Work mode. In another example, a document may be allowed to be transferred from Personal mode to Work mode, but not allowed to be used in Work mode until it has been screened for language inappropriate in the workplace. In still another example, it may be possible to enter contact information for a customer into the Work mode database, but the same information may be prohibited from being simultaneously entered into the Family mode database. In any transfer between modes, the transfer may be logged for historical or security audit reasons.

The actual mechanism used to transfer the data or software internally may depend on the structure used to keep the modes separate. For example, in the approach of FIG. 2D, the fourth mode may simply modify the relevant restrictions for the receiving mode concerning the now-shared information that was already in the fourth mode's database. In the approach of FIG. 2A or 2B, the receiving mode may store the received information and update its own list of restrictions/permissions as needed. Other techniques may also be used as appropriate.

FIG. 4 shows a flow diagram of a method of inputting data for multiple modes of operation, according to an embodiment of the invention. In flow diagram 400, at 410 the device is placed into a multimode state for data entry, with the particular modes selected at 420. This selection may occur through any feasible means, such as the user pressing a certain combination and/or sequence of buttons, or through some more automated technique. At 430, the selected modes may be displayed on the screen to affirm to the user which modes are so selected.

At 440, the device may present a format on the screen that is suitable for the type of data to be entered. For example, a scheduling format may be displayed to enter calendar events, or a contact information format may be displayed to enter the email address for a person. This may be new information, or may be a change to existing information. When the data has been entered at 450, the device may apply that data to the databases for all of the selected modes at 460. The exact method of applying that information may depend on the structure used to keep the modes separate.

FIG. 5 shows a flow diagram of a method of transferring data between modes, according to an embodiment of the invention. In flow diagram 500, at 510 the user selects the two modes to be used in the data transfer, and the device presents the split screen display format at 520. In some embodiments, 510 and 520 may be handled simultaneously, for example by using a particular button-press convention to select which modes will be involved in the split screen data transfer operation.

Different types of display formats are better suited for different types of data. When the user selects the type of data to be transferred, this may automatically select the best format for presenting that type of data at 530. Alternately, the user may select the type of display format at 530 (e.g., a spreadsheet) and then call up the particular data into that format. In either case, the selected format for one side of the split screen may be duplicated in the other side of the split screen. At 540, when the user selects the data to be transferred on one side of the screen, the data may by copied onto the corresponding parts of the other side of the screen. This transfer may be initiated through any feasible means, such as a drag-and-drop, a cut-and-paste, or other technique.

Once the data has been transferred, the user may initiate a data save function at 560 to update the database for the receiving mode. Depending on the mechanism used for accessing common data, this may involve storing a copy of the data in the receiving mode, or may simply involve updating pointers to a database shared with the originating mode.

If there is more data to be transferred, as determined at 570, the flow may return to 530 (if the new data transfer requires a different presentation format), or to 540 (if the presentation format will be the same). Once all data has been transferred between these two modes, the process may exit at 580. In some embodiments, different data may be transferred in opposite directions from the same split screen format, simply by designating data on one side of the split screen as the originating data, moving it to the other side, then doing the same thing in the opposite direction for other data.

Context Awareness

Context awareness is based on user activity. As a starting point, context awareness may note which of the three modes the user is operating in, and provide or prevent various functionality based on that mode. Alternatively, if the user is trying to perform activities that are only available in another mode, it may inform the user of that conflict. But context awareness may also extend well beyond these simple interpretations.

The key to context awareness is that the device notes what device activity (or activities, or sequence of activities) the user is currently performing, determines what other activities the user might want to perform based on past activity of the user and/or based a database of typical human behavior, and then automatically begins searching for, and providing information on, those other activities. For example, if the user requests a listing of current movies, the device may automatically begin searching for local movie theaters, a list of movies and show times available in each theater for that day, and a list of movie reviews for each of the available movies. If the user inquires about the status of the device's battery, the device may present not only current battery charge, but also an estimate of remaining battery life for each of several different operations that the user frequently performs. In another example, if the user requests an on-line bank statement to determine his current account balance, the device may also analyze previous account history to determine when the next pay check is due for automatic deposit, which reoccurring bills will be due before than date, how much money the user will have for discretionary spending based on that analysis, and a history of previous discretionary spending.

In each case, the device responds not only to what the user requests, but also makes some assumptions about what other information might be helpful to the user that was not specifically requested, and automatically attempts to obtain that other information. The device may then present this other information to the user and/or the device may take a particular action, although the user did not specifically request either the information or the action, and this other information was not necessary for responding to the user's request.

Situational Awareness

Situational awareness is based on the external environment surrounding the device. The device may obtain information on its environment through several mechanisms, such as but not limited to: 1) a GPS system to determine its physical location, 2) one or more radio systems to determine what wireless networks or wireless devices are within communication range, 3) an image recognition system that analyses camera inputs, 4) an audio recognition system that recognizes microphone inputs, 5) sensors (e.g., accelerometers) to determine movement and/or orientation of the device, 6) temperature sensors, 7) etc. One or more of these sensory inputs may be used in connection with one or more databases (internal or external) to derive even more information on the surrounding environment.

For example, from its GPS system and a digitized map, the device may determine it is located at a particular point and moving down a road at highway speeds. The device's accelerometers may then sense a sudden, high-impact force, followed by a lack of movement and a static image from the device's camera. From this information, the device may determine that an automobile crash has occurred. After audibly prompting the user and failing to receive a reply, the device may determine which cell phone tower it is currently associated with, and call 911 with an automated distress call that identifies where the vehicle is located.

In another example, the device may sense wireless traffic from a server at the user's place of employment and thereby determine that the user is at work. The device may then automatically switch to work mode.

In still another example, a user may drive to a favorite coffee shop, only to learn that the shop is closed. To learn the location of another coffee shop, the user may use the device's camera to take a picture of the coffee shop's logo, and request the location of the nearest alternative. The device may then:

a) Use image processing to determine the brand name of that chain of coffee shops.

b) Determine the user's location from the GPS system.

c) Wirelessly request and receive a list of the locations of other coffee shops in the area, along with their scheduled hours of operation.

d) Depending on the user's desired level of automation, the device may select a coffee shop from the list, or prompt the user to select a one.

e) Provide travel directions to get to the selected coffee shop. The directions may be interactive, changing as the user travels to the desired destination.

In each case, the device monitors for environmental information. When the user requests information, the device responds not only to what the user requests, but also makes some assumptions about what other information might be helpful to the user that was not specifically requested, and automatically attempts to obtain that other information based on the environmental monitoring. The device may then present this other information to the user and/or the device may take a particular action, although the user did not specifically request the information or the action.

Combined Context and Situational Awareness

FIG. 6 shows a flow diagram of a method of using both Context Awareness and Situational Awareness to trigger an action, according to an embodiment of the invention. In the illustrated flow diagram 600, the context of the device is repeatedly monitored at 605 to keep track of the mode and the operations that the user is performing within that mode. As the context is monitored, the device determines at 615 whether there might be related information that could be useful based on the current context. If so, the device seeks that information at 625. This related information might be contained in the devices' own database, or might have to be obtained from external sources. Once obtained, this related information may be stored in the device's database at 635. This stored information may or may not have current use, but can be stored in case it becomes useful.

Concurrently, the environmental sensors may be used to repeatedly monitor the device's environment at 610. As the environment is monitored, the device determines at 620 whether there might be related information that could be useful based on the current environment. If so, the device seeks that information at 630. This related information might be contained in the devices' own database, or might have to be obtained from external sources. Once obtained, this related information may be stored in the device's database at 640. This stored information may or may not have current use, but can be stored in case it becomes useful.

The process loops at 605-615-625-635 and 610-620-630-640 may continue until a triggering event occurs at 645 or 650. A triggering event may be any of various types of events in which the user requests information, the device initiates an action, an alarm is detected, etc. Based on the triggering event, at 660 the device may combine and/or correlate various context and situational information that has been collected. Some of this information may have been collected as a result of continual monitoring, and some of this information may have been collected in response to a user request or device action. After combining/correlating the various information, the device may take an action at 670 based on this information. A common action would be to present the information to the user, but the device might initiate another operation not directly involving the user. It is important to note that that the information collected and presented to the user in this series of operations is not limited to the specific information requested by the user, nor is it limited to information that is necessary to fulfill the user's request for information. It includes information that was not requested, but there is a probability that the information will be useful based on the information that was requested by the user and based on various implied, inferred, or learned relationships between the requested and non-requested information. These relationships may be based on the user's past history, on the user's recorded preferences, on generally accepted behavioral norms, on common human activities, or on other similar factors.

In many instances, both context awareness and situational awareness may be used together to trigger automated operation in the device. By sensing the external environment, and combining that information with the context of current operations in the device, the device may initiate other operations that were not requested by the user, but are based on assumptions derived from the environmental inputs and the current context.

The foregoing description is intended to be illustrative and not limiting. Variations will occur to those of skill in the art. Those variations are intended to be included in the various embodiments of the invention, which are limited only by the scope of the following claims. 

1. An apparatus, comprising a handheld electronic device having a touchscreen and a radio for wireless communications, the device to: receive a request by a user to perform a first operation; access information not requested by the user and not necessary to perform the first operation; and provide at least part of the accessed information to the user in response to the request.
 2. The apparatus of 1, wherein said access is based at least partly on a context of the first operation and a mode in which the device is operating at a time of the request.
 3. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein said information not requested by the user comprises environmental information sensed by the device.
 4. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein a selection of the provided information is based at least partly on a past history of requests by the user.
 5. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein the provided information excludes information not accessible to the user in a current operational mode.
 6. A method, comprising: performing a first operation in a handheld electronic device, based on a request by a user to perform the first operation; accessing, based on the request, information not requested by the user and not necessary to perform the first operation; and providing at least part of the accessed information to the user in response to the request.
 7. The method of claim 6, further comprising operating in each of multiple modes at different times, wherein each mode has a separate set of operational restrictions, each of said sets comprising: a restriction on accessible internet sites; a restriction on available email contacts; a restriction on data available for viewing.
 8. The method of claim 6, wherein said accessing is based at least partly on a context of the first operation and a mode in which the device is operating at a time of the request.
 9. The method of claim 6, wherein said information not requested by the user comprises environmental information sensed by the device.
 10. An article comprising a computer-readable storage medium that contains instructions, which when executed by one or more processors result in performing operations comprising: performing a first operation in a handheld electronic device, based on a request by a user to perform the first operation; accessing, based on the request, information not requested by the user and not necessary to perform the first operation; and providing at least part of the accessed information to the user in response to the request.
 11. The article of claim 10, further comprising operating, at different times, in each of multiple modes, wherein each mode has a separate set of operational restrictions, each of said sets consisting of: a restriction on accessible internet sites; a restriction on available email contacts; a restriction on data available for viewing.
 12. The article of claim 10, wherein said accessing is based at least partly on a context of the first operation and a mode in which the device is operating at a time of the request.
 13. The article of claim 10, wherein said information not requested by the user comprises environmental information sensed by the device. 